Anne Kilcoyne, senior property manager with Lexingont, Kentucky-based NAI Isaac Commercial Properties, has been elected and installed as vice president of Kentucky-West Virginia Chapter #104 of the Institute of Real Estate Management.

David Hardy, managing director at the Louisville office of CBRE, agreed that the hottest market in Louisville today is industrial. Louisville has become a magnet for users seeing to centralize their distribution options, Hardy said.

Louisville remains one of the hottest commercial real estate markets in the Midwest. That explains the big crowd that gathered at The Seelbach Hilton Louisville for Midwest Real Estate News' Louisville Commercial Real Estate Summit. A crowd filled with the top names in the region's CRE industry, attended to hear the good news about Louisvil…

In big news in the Kentuckycommercial real estate industry, JLL has completed its acquisition of Harry K. Moore, a Louisville commercial brokerage founded in 1948. The Harry K. Moore brokerage team has nearly 200 combined years of experience.

Many of Terry Grapenthin's industry colleagues know him as a principal at Lee & Associates. What most don’t know is that when he’s not overseeing the company’s overall direction, Grapenthin enjoys thrilling adventures and spending time out on the boat, fishing. He hopes to one day check sky-diving off of his bucket list and even has a set b…

The owner of the building at 639 W. Main St. in Louisville has placed the historic property on the market. Previously home to G&K Shoe Co., the three-story 10,260-square-foot property is the last building in its mostly original condition on Main Street between 6th and 8th streets.

The Louisville industrial market began 2016 on a positive note, with an overall vacancy rate of just 4.9 percent as 2015 drew to a close and 3.6 million square feet of new industrial space under construction.

The Louisville industrial market ended the 2015 on a hot streak, with the year ranking as the best for industrial leases in this market since 2008. According to data from Cushman & Wakefield CommercialKentucky, the fourth quarter of 2015 saw more than 1.96 million square feet of industrial leases in the Louisville market. That pushed the t…

The Midwest is fortunate to be home to several cities that are in the middle of commercial real estate booms. But five metropolitan areas area poised to have particularly big 2016s. A combination of low unemployment rates, a boom in spec construction, demand for downtown living and skilled work forces make these five markets ones to watch in 2016.